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tv   The Five  FOX News  May 19, 2025 9:00pm-10:00pm PDT

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this is "the five." >> questions are mounting over former president joe biden's shocking stage four cancer prognosis which has spread to his bones. while we wish him well a key ally of the obama administration is asking why it wasn't caught sooner. >> he did not develop it in the last 100 or 200 days. he had it while he was president. he probably had it at the start of his presidency in 2021. yes. i don't think there is any disagreement about that. >> so the shocking cancer diagnosis follows a brutal week for former president biden. as the new book and long waited her tapes -- a mental decline that was covered up and hidden from the public. but some of the media will already suggesting the cancer diagnosis might earn the former president a little breathing room from all the scrutiny. >> those conversations are going
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to happen but they should be more muted and set aside for now, as he's struggling through this. >> it seems to me this debate doesn't end at all but it's briefly put on pause as a result of today's news. >> the her audio release continues to reverberate as democrats and the media try to learn lessons from the cover-up. >> that's a crime against our republic and i think the democrats will pay for it for a long time, for being a part of what's now revealed to be a massive cover-up. >> we must apologize to the american people that we were part of something that wasn't on the up and up. >> in ultimately in retrospect you can't defend what the democratic party did because we were stuck with a mad man, with a corrupt president in the oval office and we should have given ourselves a better chance to win. >> hindsight is 20/20. if we could redo this tape and play it over again we would do
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things differently. >> it's hard to get somebody to give up their card keys. >> we all wish the former president well. it's awful for any family to learn this about their loved one. there is a lot we seem to be learning in the last 24 hours. a lot it seems perhaps we didn't know along the way. what do you make of all of this. >> first, my heart goes out to the biden family. a very unfortunate diagnosis and we hope he beats it but a lot of people are speculating whether this was medical malpractice or a medical cover-up and we have every right to speculate because they have been caught in so many lies. so the medical cover-up is not being said by jesse watters. it's being said all over the media by democrats and by physicians. they are saying this was caught possibly earlier, and then nothing was released, and then possibly exposed as a way to blunt the impact of the her
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report audio release and book. i don't think that's possible but at this point anything is possible. the other one is the medical mal practice. how are you not going to give a guy a psa test. how are you not going to give someone a test and then not release the results? did they not give this test to joe biden because they gave it to the last three presidents and then they released the psa numbers. so who knows if he even got tested? he was supposed to have a full test a year ago and they said there was no cancer detected. we need to know exactly what test they did, and since 2000, joe biden has broken his foot. he's had skin cancer. he has had two horrible bouts with covid-19. and then he was living as president with prostate cancer. and the entire media said he was as healthy as an ox and he was running circles around binder, so this dr. o'connor, his personal physician, there is a
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funny axiom that says having a personal physician 24/7 around the clock is a leading indicator of death. a lot of celebs, a lot of wealthy individuals have these doctors on-call and they kind of give you anything and they are just there to protect the brand, status and job. that happens with some people but this guy, o'connor, takes it to the next level. this guy was brought in from delaware, and he was in business with the biden family, and it was the oldest president in american history. probably the sickest sitting president of this century and he never gave a press conference, in four years. o'connor never came to the press and said this is what the president is dealing with. that is -- he needs to be brought in. he needs to be subpoenaed and he needs to answer some of these questions. i can't believe, if he had won, joe biden would have died in office and kamala would have been president, and the doctors and the media would have been
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like oops, sorry, we missed it. wow! wow wow! >> howard, there are multiple experts who have wound up in the wake of this news to say this kind of cancer wasn't noticed during recent check-ups. it had to be developing for quite some time. howard foreman, yale medical school, it's inconceivable this was not being followed before he left the presidency. urologist david chesterman says it's insanely unlikely someone who gets annual checkups would knot have noticed this developing cancer. >> my prayers go out to his family. this is a tough diagnosis. i have friends and family who have had this diagnosis, and i can only -- i can only imagine the tough struggle and the tough road ahead. i line with jesse on this. i think the fact that the president of the united states is not getting as exhaustive of a review of a physical, the kind
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of medical examination one would expect, and then to have all of that revealed to the public in 2025, 25 years into the 21st century, you combine that with some of the things that we people were saying about president biden throughout his presidency, questioning the cognitive abilities, some of his mental health abouts, and the physical things that happened when he fell up the stairs, down the stairs, off his bike. we deserve better. i hope what we really learn from this, i'm not one to look backwards although i pay for him, i hope that what we do going forward is to ask these doctors and physicians, we ought to have a different standard. when you think about the president's role of growing the economy, keeping the country safe, we're basically in a new economic cold war with china and russia is emerging again. we need to know everything about our president and this shouldn't be by chance, by any measure. i listened to dr. emmanuel.
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he's far brighter than i am and more educated than i am on these matters. i do have a dear friend whose wife got stage four cancer diagnosis very late, they had not seen it before and she had had an injury and got the diagnosis and passed about a year later. so these things, i imagine, can happen, but when you are the president of the united states, with the kind of care the president should get we should not be surprised by these things but i'm like you, my thoughts and prayers are with he and his family. the road ahead will be a difficult one. >> we wish him the absolute best. greg, is it right for some of the media to be saying we should set aside any talk about the cognitive cover-up during his presidency, as he battles this cancer? >> greg: when they say something like that you have to believe that that's the reason why they are breaking the news now. so you do mute and you do pause. the timing is telling you that this cancer is being used as a tool to deflect from outrage to sympathy. but get this. normal human beings, we can have
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both. we can feel sad for somebody who has cancer, like harold said we all know people intimately who have cancer, who are dying from cancer, and who will die of cancer. so we can feel sad but that's not going to infringe on the face in my brain that's reserved and dedicated to this cover-up of his incapacitation so you wouldn't get a mute or pause from me. we're talking about how could this happen. we've always been saying about all of these problems in the last eight years, how did this happen? how did this happen? how did this happen? i say eight years because this has been going on before biden was president. the neglect is on purpose. for example, we just focus on joe biden. the elder abuse line that we kept hearing. why did it continue? because joe was docile and fragile and offering no resistance to any part of the progressive agenda.
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joe's dysfunction may have been caused not by disability but by de-ability, meaning, he was war down on purpose, deliberately kept feeble and weak. it kept him easily managed. he was always tired. he probably didn't want to answer questions or sign things. so we've seen a series of colossal blunders and deliberate cover-ups. all are ethically indefensible. all you can do if you're doing this stuff is tell yourself, consider the alternative and the alternative to them was always trump. that was their narrative. they can cover up this guy who is physically and mentally feeble because look at the other guy. it's trump, so trump is an existential threat.
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that narrative became justification for every kind of amoral behavior including allowing violence, the implosion of the border, cover-ups, blatant, blatant illegal activity, siding with gangbangers, up until now. hamas sympathizers. you can approve of anything if you sell people the belief, you assign the opinion that trump is an existential risk, they knew about all of this stuff. they covered it up. >> we did see the media having to deal with the release of the her audio and tape today. in what appears to be the many stages of coping, katie. jones said democrats will pay for the cover-up of biden for a long time. >> this is a total betrayer of the american people. this is about breaking of trust and it's very difficult to get it back once it's been broken. in politics trust can be a relative term because of the industry that you're dealing with but they covered up thing after thing after thing, and
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then when the american people who are part of this republic democratic process were allowed to ask questions about the president of the united states, who was elected, they were told that they were crazy, that they were mean people, for questioning the president's cognitive state, that they weren't empathetic, and now you're seeing that happening again, with david axle r0d saying we can't really talk about it anymore and the implication there is, if you dare to ask questions about the betrayal from the democrats as a whole you're not an empathetic person. you don't understand when people get diagnosed with cancer when it's really a bigger issue of what's been going on for the last couple of years. i don't know how they get out of this because in order to regain the trust that they lost you have to be very transparent, overwhelmingly, and yet they are still doubling down on covering up and not talk it. it's very difficult for them to say you can trust us and believe us when we talk about things we
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can do for you when they can't even come -- the doctor not coming out to give press conferences. not answering any questions. i went back to all the letters the white house doctor put out, not a single mention of this and also it's kind of a betrayal to the president. how did you not -- if this is what they were doing -- give someone of that age the president of the united states, that kind of physical test. how could you not give the test? >> those questions will be asked for a long time. many people watching right now go out and get that test on a regular basis. thank you for that. up next, taking aim with president trump with some really wild accusations. ♪
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the losers of democrats pass refuse to go quietly. hillary clinton and tim waltz are back not with solutions for the country or their party but with a full-blown case of tds. kicking things off using a college graduation speech to mere ice agents with a truly despicable comparison. >> donald trump's modern day gestapo is scooping folks off the streets and being shipped off to torture dung -- dungeons. >> hillary is also running her mouth about the popular border policies by the man who beat her by mocking traditional american families. >> this very blatant effort to
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basically send a message, most advanced by vance and musk and others, what we really need from you women are more children. which is sort of odd because the people who produce the most children in our country are immigrants and they want to deport them so none of this adds up. >> first of all, don't be a handmaiden to the patriarchy. [applause] >> which kind of eliminates every woman on the other side of the aisle except for very few. >> sandra: all right. greg? do you want to talk about gestapo or what? >> greg: why do people like waltz only communicates through commencement addresses, right? not podcasts, because they can only recite their boiler plate opinions in arenas where there is no risk of a follow-up question. it's why vance mopped the floor when he was faced with someone
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asking him stuff. the moment you say what do you mean by that? or do you have proof that they are like the gestapo? they will implode. that's why lefties always get the commencement addresses, and own award shows because there is no journalist there that will ask them a question and the reason why, he's the perfect example, none of their opinions are actually real. they are all assigned so -- there is just a folksy glibness but underneath it there is nothing. and they never have to have that challenge because the people around them, hey what do you mean by that, there is no contemplation. you can always tell when someone is telling you something that isn't your own opinion. you do it all the time, jesse? you know what a perfect example is? it's like me insulting nickelback, and i have never heard their songs, but i make fun of nickelback but it's only
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because i have heard other people make fun of them and it's an assigned opinion. hillary used the phrase, i wrote it down here, handmaiden to the b patriarchy. this is appealing to an ever shrinking circle of feminists women, the same who bow to the altar -- it's another assigned opinion that's lazily presented men against women, whether it's race or gender. as long as you pit one group against the other they won't look up at you. this is how the democratic party survives. they want everybody to fight each other over their specific group rather than fight over an idea, because once you look at the ideas, you leave the party. >> sandra: and if you're in a group that they think should vote for democrats and you stray away, sandra, then you get this kind of treatment. does hillary clinton want to
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comment on susie whales, the first female chief-of-staff, the pro mother administration, that the trump administration has put into place, that trump has hired all of these young women to work for him who are doing a great job on the merits, to say you can't keep holding the hand of the patriarch. >> sandra: i interviewed the father of a seventh grade girl who was put out of contention running in a 200 meter race running against a biological boy, and it took this suburban father to bring it to the airwaves to bring attention to the matter because people like hillary clinton are not. as far as tim waltz is concerned he's got a captive audience when it comes to graduation speeches. if it were to him i think we would see him all over the place. i think the democrats maybe holding back on him but if you look at the response, the republicans should probably be happy that he keeps himself out
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there in the forefront. but hillary clinton's words, it got me today. watching that girl not be able to get a third place finish because she has to race against a boy. >> jesse: i'm just getting word from the producer, waltz has stage four jazz hands. >> don't you love pay tens of thousands of dollars for college and you get a lecture like this. >> i would fall to sleep if tampon would talk to me. i've invited him on twice. you can't call ice agents nazis. that's a career ender. federal law enforcement officials are nazis, and this is coming from the guy who had a covid snitch line. this is coming from a guy who fantasizes over communist china which is a little more in line with those other people that he mentioned. if you have a face tattoo and you have criminal convictions in
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this country and you're a foreign national and you get picked up, i don't want a lawyer, i don't want an appeal, i want you, adios, goodbye, now, hillary, she thinks it's v virtuous to have the entire third world break through, have a baby at an american hospital without health insurance and then just raise the kid in a hotel room in midtown while we pay for it, absolutely not. we want more babies. everybody wants more babies because if you don't have them it's basic arithmetic, katie. you go bankrupt first and then civilization collapses and all the policies the left are pushing is contributing to the decline of civilization whether it's porn, cannabis, rapid urbanization, rapid industrialization, high mortgage rates, all of these things are making it impossible to have
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children and raise children. i just feel bad for chelsea clinton. >> do you really? i'm sure you do. >> and bill. >> she didn't choose to be born. >> yes. all right. so carol, do you think it's time to say goodbye to hillary and tim? >> i've been critical of my party over the last several months for the way we've handled the aftermath of the election. you look at, just as a juxtaposition, you look at the special elections that have been held since november democrats have fared somewhat well largely because those democrats running are actually in the country, you just recently had a mayor in nebraska and omaha, a republican, a democrat beat them. they aren't tapping into this democratic message. the autopsy the democrats lead that lays out, that tries to lay out and determine why we lost, how we lost, no one has seriously done it at the federal level. as a result your free agents like mr. waltz, when i say free agents, known political figures,
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obviously secretary clinton is a known political figure but they are not saying things with any coordination or symmetry. for that matter they don't sound as if they are really in touch with the things that happened. you talk about the transgender athlete that's an issue that we as democrats if we don't get serious about it and realistic about, and credible on, we're not going to be listened on other issues that are meaningful in people's lives. until you understand what the issue is, you're going to continue to hear these voices talking in, frankly an unorganized and ineffective way about things that people care about. my advice if you can't do it at the federal level at least listen to those who are winning the special elections in the state races, local races. what are they saying that's appealing to everyday americans in a broad cross-section of the country. until you get an autopsy and figure it out from the painful
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lessons you're continue to show these kind of silly bits. >> i think that's good advice from harold who would like for you to move on. up next, democrats are going ballistic over a big, beautiful bill and americans are finally keeping more of their hard earned cash. ♪ ♪ rough, or tired? with miebo, eyes can feel ♪ miebo ♪ ♪ ohh yeah ♪ miebo is the only prescription dry eye drop that forms a protective layer for the number one cause of dry eye: too much tear evaporation. for relief that's ♪ miebo ♪ ♪ ohh yeah ♪ remove contact lenses before using miebo. wait at least 30 minutes before putting them back in. eye redness and blurred vision may occur. ♪ miebo ♪ ♪ ohh yeah ♪ ask your eye doctor about prescription miebo. sometimes my moderate to severe plaque psoriasis gets in my way. ♪ but thanks to skyrizi, i'm free to bare my skin.
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i'm glad i found stability amidst it all. gold. standing the test of time. ♪ >> oh, wow. fox news alert trump reacting just moments ago to the shocking cancer diagnosis of former president joe biden. watch. >> president trump: it's a very sad situation. i feel very badly about it. and, i think people should try and find out what happened because, i tell you, i don't know if it had anything to do with us, but walter reed is
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really good, some of the best doctors i have seen. i don't even know if they were involved but a doctor was involved in each case. maybe it was the same doctor, and somebody is not telling the facts. it's a big problem. >> meanwhile democrats are ripping trump's big, beautiful bill after it cleared a hurdle in a late night vote and poised for a larger vote on wednesday. >> this pending bill is terrible. and i think the american people know that. >> i made a very simple case that the republican budget is not going to help working class folks. >> this budget bill is an absolute disaster. it's going to kick over 10 million people all of their healthcare. these guys are running the economy recklessly because all they care about is the health of the mar-a-lago billionaire class. >> harold, democrats think this is a terrible bill but they think it's a terrible bill for the wrong reason. it's not a great bill because we're in a fiscal crisis and we aren't acting like it. we need to cut, cut, cut, and i think we're adding $2.5 trillion
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to the debt, is that correct? >> i think it more than that. >> they are mad because we're not adding more. >> i think a couple of things. you and i agree -- for a slightly different reason. there is no doubt, this bill here is the single forecast, single largest increase forecasted and debt pressure of any bill that's ever before considered. two, in the last 10 years, to your point about the spending cuts, to put it into perspective. you talked about population growth, our national debt has grown by 9 #%. let's round it up to a hundred percent. it's doubled in the last 10 years. our population, however, has only grown 5%. and tax collections have gone up 60%. so there is no doubt, for democrats who think we should just tax everybody, you can't do that. you have to cut spending, and for those who say we -- that we should not think about raising taxes on the ultrarich in the
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country i give you this number. the 10 richest americans, when you combine their net worth, they are worth almost $1.9 trillion. i don't begrudge wealth but our entire discretionary budget which is anything but defense, social security, medicare, and interest on the debt, is only 1.9 trillion. so you have 10 people with that net worth. i'm not a believer in overtaxing people but definitely believe we shouldn't overtax working people, middle class and poor people. jesse said tariffs are the answer. we've had some talks about this, they largely affect the middle class and poor. why? because so much of their income is used to buy things and consume things. tax cuts, as much as the president and republicans want to say this tax bill, extending these things will help middle class americans the vast majority of the people to be helped by the tax class are the wealthiest. over the last 12 years the s&p 500 has gone up over 400% and the only way to benefit from the stock market is if you have
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money invested in the stock market and you have to have a lot for that to benefit you. so i say to democrats you have to cut spending. i say to republicans, stop kidding americans that you're not raising -- that you're not cutting taxes for the richest americans. why not raise taxes on those earning 2.5 million or more? we may differ a little bit but one thing we agree on the debt won't go down because of this and the people who will benefit the most are not middle class or working class americans. there will be people around this table and people much richer. >> greg: all right, bernie sanders. katie, no tax on tips. i don't think that's helping the billionaires and trillion airs. >> no taxes on overtime for police officers, for example. no taxes on social security. lots of tax breaks, if this does not pass, it would be the largest tax hike you have ever seen in american history, which is key. lots of components to this. harold is talking about the cbo score, throw that out the window because it doesn't calculate extra passes that are paid once you get more of your money back
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and you put it back into the economy. it doesn't account for regulatory growth and what that cost companies. you talk about people who have large net worth, yes, those -- their worth is tied up in big companies, they don't just have cash that they can just give to the government unless companies go away,tesler and twitter being an example of that, amazon. the white house is pushing out a number of statements from all kind ofs of at this time within sis. americans for posterity, airlines for america, numbers usa. these are all different groups or businesses that have different stakes in the bill whether it's illegal immigration, travel, the economy, all those things. so they think this bill is good for their own constituencies and it's diverse, so that's why they are pushing that out, and if it doesn't pass, the republicans won't have this opportunity again because they have full control of washington, d.c., which is what reconciliation is all about. >> the government is taking in more money today than it ever has in the history of the
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country. more spending and more taxing will -- [inaudible] >> if you don't extend the 2017 tax cuts you're raising taxes on essentially everybody. >> i don't disagree but you should raise it, on the people lower it on the people who need it most. >> taxes on tips, overtime wages that katie mentioned, also they want to direct a lot of this money, billions, to immigration enforcement after the crisis we just lived through over the past few years, one last point on the tariffs, because there is a lot of fear mongering over this. what i don't hear democrats talking about right now they love to talk about the drop in the stock market as fear built over the tariffs and now the stock market has not only rallied back all the losses since liberation day it's now higher than when they even announced the tariffs to begin with and i don't have a peep on it. >> that's because they reversed the tariffs. >> not all of them. there is a little box on your tax return, harold, you can
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check and voluntarily pay more. >> i follow the trump model, i only pay what i have to say. >> so under the throat of irs coming to your house with guns, but because you want to save the country, you can do it. >> can i make one point? >> please, jesse. >> jesse: i want to make a point about medicare. stop falling asleep. they keep on saying you're going to cut medical care. you know what they are doing? if you're a young able-bodied healthy american man 26 years old you don't even want to go to work, you can get on medicaid. >> it's blowing a hole in the budget thanks to barack obama. you can live at your parent's hour, play softball on the weekends, sell ecstasy on the side, not even look for a job, and you can get free healthcare. that's what they are doing. they are just closing that lazy loophole. >> selling the ecstasy. >> i had to make medicaid interesting. >> why did you choose softball?
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or baseball, katie. [laughter] >> giver working people the tax cuts, not the richest. >> we get it. gees. [laughter] >> up next, president trump smacks the boss around. ♪
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♪ >> the boss lovers to talk smack about 46 while on foreign soil. bruce springsteen excuseings government of running a rogue government but offstage the so-called dried out prune is singing a whole different tune. >> what's your message for trump? >> grace. thank you for grace. >> but president trump is showing bruce springsteen, his boss, calling for a major
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investigation into bruce and his liberal celeb friends who he says got paid millions to fawn over kamala during the 2024 campaign. greg, do you support a federal investigation into all celebs? >> greg: yes, i think they should be flown to el salvador. i don't know about these people being paid. they don't seem like they need the money. they are into the status and the relevance to feel important without actually putting in the work. this is another example of an opinion being assigned. there is no difference in springsteen's opinion from tim waltz. they are all the same things that have been said about trump. it's not original. i think, springsteen has a huge fear, if he were to meet trump he would like him, agree with him and they would get along because that's what happens every time a rapper, a comedian and actor immediate trumps.
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it forces you to release these assigned opinions that you've been carrying around like rocks in your head. it sucks, but maybe put your ego aside. if you have these strong feelings about this guy and you're willing to talk about him on foreign soil go to the white house like bill mar did and meet him. >> we should have trump go to hollywood. it looked like he was just playing his acoustic guitar, sandra. does that deserve what? $500 grand to the e street band. >> i don't know. we all love to go to our concerts and take in our art and our music and our shows and we want the politics to be left out of it. i don't know. i haven't heard reaction -- i haven't heard reaction from the crowd. but, i mean, have you heard -- i love that speech. i love that he did that in the middle of his concert, that i
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saved all my dollars for, to come to this concert. i'm so glad -- no. okay. >> greg: it would be like me playing the flute during the five the whole time. people don't come to hear me play the flute. >> would do you that? >> greg: no. >> flute or a recorder. you could have a whole band. >> harold what about you what do you think? >> i agree with sandra. i love kick rock, ufc, chick-fil-a, and all three of those entities' politics may be different from mine, even when they say things that i know are different than my politics. i wish that people, i'm not a springsteen bruce fan, i wish people wouldn't go overseas and criticize people. trump criticized dana's old pass, talking about nation building and we're going to get away from that. he can have those views but don't do it overseas. >> bush by name? >> he basically did. i mean, he essentially said, our
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policies of nation building and spreading democracy in those ways we're going to get away from them. he has every right to those opinions but i wish no one would do that when you're not on american soil. and, you know, i don't necessarily disagree, i think people who meet the president like him. the president finds himself agreeing with people he meets and the people he meets finding themselves agreeing with him a little bit more. and that's called, in my become, bipartisanship and common sense. >> or the uniparty. i don't know. i find it, not only did he criticize overseas but he's standing in a country where they lock people up and put them in jail for hurting people's feelings on the internet while he's claiming that america and the trump administration is the problem. just a little rich irony. >> yes. >> up next, a finger death grip among world powers. ♪ ruled out of rome by a man named caesar augustus,
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who understood himself to be the son of a god. is about to be challenged by a baby in a manger. hillsdale college invites you to explore how early christians worshiped, faced persecution, and transformed the roman world in the completely free online course. ancient christianity. the audacious message of the old and new testament is in the time of the egyptians, the babylonians, the assyrians, the greeks, and the romans. the god of the universe actually revealed himself to humanity. ancient christianity is one of dozens of free online courses offered by hillsdale college. sign up at learnfromhillsdale.org. to discover how early christians paved the way for our civilization. out of the collapse of the western half of the roman empire comes pure chaos. but out of that chaos comes faith.
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whether you're a person of faith, a history enthusiast, or just curious, you'll discover inspiring stories from the earliest beginnings of christianity. including why early christians faced persecution and how they spread christ's message during the fall of rome. it truly is miraculous that christianity has survived to the 21st century. at no cost to you, you'll receive a front row seat to history as it unfolds through the eyes of the earliest christians. i'm kent calvert. this is our course on ancient christianity. let's begin. this inspiring story is waiting for you at learnfromhillsdale.org. sign up for free today.
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>> harold: welcome back. is the >> welcome back. turkey's president given macron a death grip, refusing to let it go. the two world leaders were at a
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political summit in albania. >> bring his white flag and wave it around. please, surrender. >> is this -- >> is this edited because -- we left out the part where macron comes in i dare you to put my finger -- he pulls his finger and you hear the loudest fart you ever heard. literally had to clear the room. it was disgusting, it was so bad macron's wife got up and left. but not before giving erdogan a good right hook. >> do you think that maybe the president of turkey was asking sandra, if, indeed, they do the peace summit between ukraine and russia -- macron will probably be there. >> so then he has a few fingers, okay, and then he goes under one. i think he's like finishing a point, he's pulling on him. i've watched this a third time.
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>> but he's not talking, he's nodding his head. >> primetime, are you covering this? >> no, the situation is. this men like to touch other guys. >> is that true? >> we like to touch them. >> talk about that jesse. >> jesse: at the fitness sauna where i saw you. >> politician guys love to touch guys. but then when you're old, when you're old you can get away with more stuff. and then when you're turkish, the sky is the limit. >> maybe it's a cultural thing. you know, they do things differently down there. >> raising prices. >> one more thing. is up next. ♪
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your small monthly donation of just $10 could be the reason a child in crisis survives. please call or go online to givetosave.org to help save lives today. we were tired of cleaning out our gutters every few months. and i wanted him off that ladder. so we got leaffilter. leaffilter's a permanent gutter solution, so you never have to worry about damage from clogged gutters again. call 833.leaf.filter today, or visit leaffilter.com.
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i love dirt... ...especially in spring. here's martha stewart, talking about dirt again. well, this is my favorite time of year. we do the same thing every year. organic soil, bonnie plants, feeding everything really well. and i'm going to get incredible results. yeehaa! walt disney studios chose t-mobile for business to help bring lilo and stitch to theatres this summer. t-mobile's advanced 5g solutions connected remote production hubs, powering real-time collaboration. ♪ >> it's time for one more thing. >> thanks.
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tonight, a great show. tonight. let's do this. >> in your face, harold. >> yes, harold. you don't have a nickname. >> greg: this harold, chihuahua, is known as handsome harold. he's a chihuahua. he was adopted at fons small dog rescue. it's nice when you hear about a 10-year-old chihuahua being adopted. he enjoys relaxing, and he bonds with people quickly unlike you, harold. >> do you think he goes by howard? [laughter] >> i'm never going to live that down. jesse? >> jesse: midshipman at the u.s. naval academy, will learn this, conquered the climb at annapolis. longstanding tradition. they worked to ascend a greased up 21 foot monument, and swap a hat on top with an upper classmen's hat, slat they ared with 200 pounds of the vegetable
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shortening and sprayed with water. it took 2 hours 27 minutes and 31 seconds to climb it. amazing feat of strength. comey doubles down. >> friday night at the garden was big. the knicks made history, first time in 25 years headed to the eastern conference finals, beat their arch rival celtics. the fans had a ball. they poured into the streets taking over parts of seventh afternoon, celebrating the win. game won versus indy's wednesday night. we still have a ways to go but go knicks. >> sandra, back in 1946, harvard law school purchased what it thought was a cheap copy of the magna carta for 27 bucks. it turns out the school's copy is a rare issue of the iconic british document and could be worth millions. the original was written in 1215 and many things were based on
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that that were written. >> it kicked the ceiling, mid flipped, it this ramp like a rocket, sored sky high and met the ceiling in an unexpected plot twist but he's okay. just a pump to his head and, of course to his ego. maybe raise the ceiling for tricks like that. >> you skateboard, right? >> i skateboard holding orphans. i don't skate, what do you think, what do you do, sandra? >> thanks so much for having me. that's it for us, have a great night, everybody. this is not speculation. he's most certainly, you were saying had it when he was president. oh, yeah. >> he did not develop it in the last 100, 200 days. >> joe biden suddenly diagnosed with cancer. what's going

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